RTÉ FACTUAL: 1976 saw one of the most dramatic attacks ever on members of an Garda Síochána when an explosive device killed one young garda and injured four others.

1976 saw one of the most dramatic attacks ever on members of an Garda Síochána. On the night of the 16th Oct Gardaí were deliberately lured to an isolated abandoned farmhouse in Co. Laois. The house had been booby trapped. The amount of explosives involved made sure that, once triggered, there would be total devastation.

In this cruel trap Garda Michael Clerkin, from Monaghan and only 4 years in the force, was killed in the explosion. Detective Tom Peters was seriously injured and left both deaf and blind and colleagues Jim Cannon, Ben Thornton and Gerry Bohan managed to survive the attack.

Only 40 minutes after the controversial Emergency Powers Bill had been signed into law, the Gardaí in Portlaoise received an anonymous phone call reporting subversive activity at a disused house at Garryhinch and that there was a plot to kill local Fine Gael TD Oliver J Flanagan. Portlaoise got in touch with the local Portarlington Station – only 3 miles from Garryhinch. Sergeant Jim Cannon was advised to make his way to the disused house. Sergeant Cannon brought 2 uniformed Gardaí with him, Gerry Bohan and Michael Clerkin, and they joined forces with Detectives Tom Peters and Ben Thornton en route. The 5 men headed for Garryhinch. The proceeded to check out the abandoned house – and Garda Michael Clerkin, who was 24 years old, used an open rear window to gain access. He opened the front door from inside to let the others in to search the property. The booby trap was triggered and he was killed instantly. His 4 companions were badly injured. The house was demolished. The bomb was the IRA’s calculated response to the newly signed Emergency Powers Bill.

Although there were many arrests, nobody was ever convicted of the murder of Garda Michael Clerkin. Jim Cannon, Ben Thornton and Gerry Bohan were eventually able to go back to work, but Detective Tom Peters was left deaf and almost completely blind by the blast. The bomb blast has had a lasting devastating effect on five families. The men were never awarded “Scott Medals” for their ordeal at Garryhinch, and this lack of recognition still angers them.

In this episode of Garda ar Lár Jim Cannon, one of the survivors remembers the fateful night as if it was yesterday. A colleague of Garda Clerkin from Portarlington station Máirtín Mac Con Iomaire recalls swapping shifts with him the day before the attack and later being a pallbearer at Michael’s funeral. Peter and Margaret Clerkin talk about their brother Michael and the shock of hearing of his death. His brother-in-law Paddy Duffy remembers going to Portlaoise Hospital Mortuary and talks about how angry he was at the fact that a man so young in the prime of his life was taken from the family.

Other contributors include journalist Tomás Ó Ceallaigh and the General Secretary of the Garda Síochána Retired Members Association Gerard Lovett.

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